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Friday, August 2, 2013

Bob Beckel: The Worst Person in the World

Though no one remembers him or
his show anymore, former MSNBC attack dog Keith Olbermann used to have a
segment on Countdown with Keith Olbermanncalled “The Worst Person in the World,” a label he awarded to
figures like his Fox News nemesis Bill O’Reilly or such formidable political
threats as then-teenager Bristol Palin. It’s time we resurrect that label and
award it this week to Bob Beckel.

Beckel
is the left-leaning co-host for the Fox News show The Five. He’s easy to recognize among the other four personalities
on that show: he’s the one in suspenders whose mumbling becomes clearly
understood only when he accidentally drops
F-bombs on-air.

On Friday’s show, the five hosts discussed fellow Fox pundit
Bill O’Reilly’s recent, somewhat controversial commentary on race, in which he
stated that the black community has to abandon a culture of grievance and
victimization, and address its own problems, including crime. Beckel grumbled
that the white “O’Reilly doesn’t know what he’s talking about” and claimed that
he was stereotyping all black Americans as “thugs.” The other hosts disputed this
interpretation, and co-host Greg Gutfeld countered with statistics on black
crime, which are wildly disproportionate to the size of the black population.
“Numbers aren’t racist,” Gutfeld concluded. “Facts can’t be racist.”

Beckel fired back irrelevantly that “blacks don’t just live
in Harlem. There are blacks all across this country.” Nobody said otherwise,
Bob; no one said all blacks were inner city criminals. Beckel’s straw man attack is typical of the
left’s kneejerk response to inconvenient truths on race; they regard any
suggestion that blacks bear any responsibility for their own issues or for
racial tensions as a sweeping, racist smear of all blacks. That’s why
discussions of race in America never get past the starting gate – no criticism
of blacks allowed.

Eric Holder
despicably called Americans cowards on the issue of race, but the cowards are
the ones like Holder and Beckel, who don’t want a truthful discussion. They don’t want to talk about black
racism (in fact, notice how they have successfully defined “racism” to mean
“white racism”?). They don’t want to talk about the fact that blacks aren’t
being massacred by whites but by other blacks. They don’t want to talk about instances
of horrific black-on-white violence far more shocking than the Zimmerman case.
They don’t want to talk about black gangs and a “gangsta” culture glamorized by
the biggest stars in the entertainment industry. They don’t want to talk about the
New Black Panther Party emboldened under the protection of Holder. They don’t
want to talk about the fact that racial division is nearing an historical peak
under the Great Racial Healer, Barack Obama. They don’t want a discussion at
all. The race-obsessed left just wants whites to sign up for white privilege workshops and offer reparations.

Beckel writes a weekly column for USA Today with conservative counterpart Cal Thomas. In their
most recent offering last week about the aftermath of the Zimmerman
verdict, Beckel kept roiling the waters of racial discontent, claiming that the
“emotions” unleashed in sometimes violent
demonstrations across the country were indicative of “familiar issues that continue to be ignored":

The anger in the black community was less about an awful verdict and
Florida's barbaric ‘stand your ground’ law than it was about the indiscriminate
stopping and searching of blacks by police without cause, and subtle things like
locking car doors when a black man crosses a street, or following black
shoppers. There are many more examples.

“Barbaric”? Perhaps
Beckel is unaware that Stand Your Ground laws – which were not applicable in
the Zimmerman case and were not even used by his defense team – benefit blacks
more than any other race. Stand Your Ground is not about, as the race-baiting
left would have us believe, the right of white vigilantes to hunt down black
children.

As for “subtle things,” apparently Beckel won’t be happy until women prove
they are racism-free by flinging their car doors open wide when a strange black
man approaches. Of course, it’s still okay to lock them when strange whites
approach.

Beckel went on in
the co-editorial to defend President
Obama’s “the jury acted stupidly” statement on race, calling it “excellent”: “What the president was
trying to tell whites and other races is that despite enormous advances in
civil rights, an undercurrent of racism still leads to the targeting of too
many black men.” Cal Thomas countered
with an heretical notion that the left simply cannot entertain, which is that
“[t]he problems in the black community aren't mainly caused by racism.”
He listed the out-of-wedlock birth rate among black women, the astronomical
figures on the abortion of black babies, and Democrat politicians who keep poor
black children bound to failed schools.

“[B]ut there is
hidden racism that blacks experience and whites don't understand,” Beckel
whined. “That's what propelled last weekend’s protests as much as the killing
of Trayvon Martin.” Thank goodness we have a white man like Beckel, who
dismissed O’Reilly’s opinion on race precisely because he is a white man, to be
the voice of Black America. He is
absolutely right about one thing: “Race
relations have come a long way, but those who believe racism is behind us are
living an illusion.” Racism will never disappear entirely, Bob, but you know
what will make it fade by and large into insignificance? Stop fanning the
flames of racial anger and mistrust.

Another Democrat Fox commentator, Kirsten Powers, has
shown signs lately of coming to her senses and choosing the right side of
issues. Is there hope for Beckel? It looks promising. A week ago he actually warned
New York’s tirelessly totalitarian Mayor Michael Bloomberg to “mind his own
business.” Beckel recently acquired
a reputation among his fellow progressives as an “Islamophobe” for a few
comments that the supposedly tolerant left couldn’t tolerate, about ending
Muslim immigration here and in Europe. And he sharply criticized
the White House over the NSA scandal, saying it was “one of the most outrageous
examples of the stepping on the Constitution I’ve heard,” and that it verged on
“fascism.”

So perhaps Bob Beckel is
not beyond redemption. But for now, for aiding and abetting the race grievance
industry in this country after the Zimmerman verdict, he is “The Worst Person
in the World.”

About Me

Mark is the editor of TruthRevolt and a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. He writes about culture and politics for Acculturated, FrontPage Magazine, The Federalist, The New Criterion, and elsewhere. He has made television appearances on CNN, Glenn Beck and elsewhere, as well as many radio and public appearances.
Mark has worked on numerous films including co-writing the award-winning documentary “Jihad in America: The Grand Deception.”
He is currently adapting a book for the big screen and writing one of his own for Templeton Press.